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Health Insurance: 6 Month Average or Current Expense?

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    Health Insurance: 6 Month Average or Current Expense?

    When calculating Health Insurance expense for the Means Test (and again on Schedule J) should you use a 6 month average or current expenditure?

    Reason I ask is that I am going through divorce.

    So my health insurance looking back 6 months would include spousal coverage and therefore, higher premiums. But, health insurance looking forward will be single coverage and therefore, lower premiums.

    Which is proper? Look-back or look-ahead?

    #2
    Are you certain you will not be required to carry health insurance on your spouse? When I got divorced, the judge forced my husband to keep me on his policy because I was at that time unemployed. I had to pay him for it, but if I had been slow to pay him, that wouldn't have mattered, he would not have been allowed to cancel that policy for at least a year.
    Figured out we were in trouble: (Wait, we're in trouble? ) Stopped paying creditors: Aug 2010 Filed Chap 7: Apr 29, 2011 341: Jun 1, 2011 Report of no distribution: Jun 1, 2011 Discharged Aug 2, 2011

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      #3
      Well nothing is certain until you are divorced. How much difference would the change make?

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        #4
        I was told last 6 months determines the 6 months looking forward. Its a good thing for you that the past 6 months are higher. That is my understanding.
        I am NOT an attorney. This is NOT advice.

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          #5
          Originally posted by UghUghUgh View Post
          I was told last 6 months determines the 6 months looking forward. Its a good thing for you that the past 6 months are higher. That is my understanding.
          The last 6 do not influence the looking forward. Let's say you were still paying all your cc's and mortgage so you couldn't afford insurance for the past 6 months. You file-you're discharged. You now have $X a month to spend on things like health insurance or whatever. Your Schedule J is a projection of what you will spend going forward.

          back to OP-the thing that is puzzling to me and i don't know the answer to is if you file a joint bankruptcy do two Schedules I & j get filed? If so then I would assume that the joint filing would include both persons premiums as it pertains to the means test and each schedule J would include a single premium. if you file bankruptcy alone, that is where I'm a bit confused. Logic would say use the single-but the fact of the matter is you had the expense so I guess maybe you could include the whole thing.

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            #6
            I am borderline Chapter 7. Income above the median, but I will be paying my ex spousal support for the next 3 years which will effectively eliminate any disposable income for a Chpt 13 repayment plan. I will no longer maintain her health insurance (that's part of why I'm paying her spousal support).

            So, the health insurance expense "averaged" over the past 6 months would help me qualify for 7. Projecting forward with a lower premium might kick my petition toward 13.

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              #7
              Hi qwerty,

              In general the means-test is a 6-month lookback and Schedule J is projected post-BK expenses. (forward looking)

              Sounds like the health insurance /w spouse gets deducted on the means-test, and the spousal support gets deducted on schedule J

              ....but I definitely wouldn't take my word for it, when you mix Bk and DV a good attorney is a necessity!!

              Tom in Colo
              Ch7 filed 5/12/2010.....341 meeting 6/30/2010....report of no distribution 8/15/2010.....discharged 10/01/2010.....closed 11/09/2010

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